You can tell that he cares for the tree as he "pets it" while talking about it :) Love these videos. You can tell that he loves what he does and loves sharing his passion
Crazy that this video was suggested to me, I randomly ended up going to this nursery on a camping trip and the grounds are absolutely beautiful. Everyone was also really friendly.
Totally amazing, at first i didn't see what a beautiful gnarled tree this would turn into. This tree is better now than it would have ever looked. I love when things go wrong in bonsai only to work out for the best. To me this tree aged 20 more years in one day, super job Peter you are a true master.
I would love to see a photograph of the tree as it is now. You do such great work saving those trees, I sure hope that they get the care they need from that point on!
mmm like he said, for the branches to set into a lower hanging posture will take years because of how old they are. Would be interesting to see if there's any new growth, but as usual with a bonsai you're cutting off most of that new growth... I think his hope for the tree was to see if in a few years there will be sprouting out of the base parts of the older branches. Next fall might not have anything to offer (besides more hope, would be nice to see it still alive).
That's a pretty amazing transformation. I still haven't developed the "eye" but when i keep at it my trees turn out pretty good. Thanks for all you do.
This is march 2023 and I learned from Mr. Bonsai how to take care of my juniper spartan who is in bad shape after a killing summer in Texas, thank you for giving me hope for my little one spartan.
Lots of people would have probably given up on that tree but Peter always has the vision to turn it into something beautiful. Thanks for the inspiration. Wonderful video. Thanks for sharing.
Some people may not like to see sick trees, but as a young but mildly experienced gardener, I understand that bonsai trees do not always look healthy and as beautiful as we would like.
It's kinda fun that I find this video two years after it's posted. I hope there's an update video eventually. showing the progress of this particular tree.
I saw another recovery video from this person. It seems to me that in the hands of an expert these sick little trees come out of it all better trees because somehow they have more experience. Their mishaps give them a unique character. They look less pampered and more world wide.
I somehow have killed every arborvitae cypress I have ever come in contact with. I do not know why but pines and other evergreens people claim i have a green thumb for. I for the life of me can not understand why this occurs. But, I was very glad to say you do not lose hope for trees. That made my heart happy! I am so glad to get inspiration from your video's. I am thinking of tackling a a scotch pine just because of what I seen you do on your video's in their care. They grow naturally here and I don't kill them. LOL
I love the time scale involved with these trees. Making some changes and then spending the next 3 or 4 years considering what changes might be made next time.
Peter, you really are the Tree Doctor, or more like a tree magician! Its wonderful to watch you work; you can see you go into 'the zone'. This tree really is a Phoenix from the flames. Production team: love the still photos , especially the before and after shots. Its lovely to see Peter pruning, even when its sped up. I could watch your intro all day 💙
Peter, I can't believe how much better this tree looks now! It is really more interesting now than it probably ever was! I'd give my right... no, my left arm for this tree!
it's like one of my favorite trees you've shown so far it just makes for a fantastic character when it suffered a bit in a few years it will look great again :)
Thank you God for giving me these videos to keep my head on straight as we go through this shut down of life. My life is not shut down, it has just started.
A wonderful video! I have admired the art of bonsai for years, although sadly I have to accept that owning a bonsai isn't in the cards for me. I'm struggling to keep my pothos alive 😂. I will live vicariously through UA-cam creators like this gentleman!
Stunning, before & after! As I reflect about it ‘neglect’ can have some value. This requires some risk, of course. The base of trunk is absolutely exceptional.
Somuch love and dedication in restoration. Thank you for helping us understand. This is my first time here and i hit subscribe after 1 minute watching. Please learn us more
We are not worthy!!! You are truly a Master! Thank you for sharing your craft. I look forward to the day when I can take a class with you. Bravo 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽
Please index this video for reference in the late spring early summer next year to allow us to see the progress. Thx and keep up the good work. If I can ever afford it, I would love to visit your nursery and take a couple of classes.
Peter I know you have a video out there on your sphagnum moss trick. It seems you were using it on this tree. I have a hinoki cypress that dried out a bit this winter. Most is brown but there are some localized green spots. It is in pumice and akadama. Would you recommend repotting into sphagnum moss? How much of the old soil would I remove?
Anyone shocked by the reduction of growth - take heart. A Cryptomeria, growing in my garden has been cut back many times but still grows and grows - and wild birds love it. I'm sure this one will be fine.
Thank you Peter for this video. I have a cascade cryptomeria with the same issue. The only live part is the big pad at the bottom. It has not budded back for 3 years. I’m thinking of doing some fancy wiring with the lengthy bare trunk. This is an inspiration.
I need some help, and if can tell me what to do, I appreciate it. I have pruned a banyan tree and have put the pieces in both soil and water. They have been there for a week, and both of them are dry and almost dead. Is there a way to mend these like you mended that grown tree?
I have 2 bonsai trees. A fig and an English oak. Mould keeps building up on the soil. What’s causing it and how can I prevent it?? Is it doing any harm??
Wow that tree looked dead, the repairs made it look awesome. This is art, if the owners keep that thing well cared for it will be a masterpiece. Pretty cool how it takes years and years, some of these dang trees in museums are 1,000, that’s insane!
I’m planning on starting with a young tree, and in the spring I will get cuttings from some other trees. I’m exited because If I do it right they will last my whole life
Might be a little late, but fungi are specialized to degrade and "eat" wood, even if it takes a while, so after a few years the live tissue can get damaged from the fungus. The amount of damage depends on how healthy your tree is, but it is unnecessery stress for the tree. I think it's better to preserve the dead branches with sulfur solution, so they don't get eaten
Peter you’re amazing. I’ve been growing bonsais for twenty years and still lose the odd one every 3-5 years. Your tutoring still amazes me and I can sit enthralled during your videos. Thank you from Australia.🇦🇺🙏🌲
My Crypptomeria needed a rescue and I put it in spaghum moss as you advised, Mr Chan. I really hope it wil go back to its former beauty. The foliage is not entirely brown really, but got darker and looks dry/scorched and the roots don't have any new growth at all. I didn't let it dry out, at all. Can the reason be that my tree didn't like the reporting I've done at beginning of March from an ordinary flower pot to a ceramic bonsai tree? Maybe it was too early, or I cut too much roots? Thank you
Very informative and fun video. Thanks master , your customers are lucky to have you around - it's priceless that you exist to the world, very wise man
At 14.20 and at 14.37 you clearly hear the brand snap quite loudly as he bends it, but he doesn't flinch the least and he is clearly in control. In the latter example, it even seems like he does a little pre-cutting on beforehand. So it's quite interesting and I wondered the same: how does that work? :D
Yes! It tells a beautiful story and symbolizes that when things look bad (dead), there is often still life. And although it may scar, you can still come out beautiful!
Hi thanks for the info, just wondering if my soil is adequate for my Chinese elm. I repotted it last year using bonsai focus repotting soil and it was doing really well until last month and all the leaves fell off and looks dead , I think this was down to not watering enough, I watched a video which advised me to put in the sink and fill up to the edge of the pot and allow water to soak in from underneath. Repeat every few days keeping the soil moist . I'm only 1 day in and so I'm waiting another day or so to soak again, I was just wondering if it was advisable at this stage to repot using a better soil mix or should I keep what I have until the summer or when/ if it starts growing again? Thanks
Hello there i saw bonsai of my dad. I want to revive it. But unfortunately when I cut it the some part of branches the bark is brown already is it revivable just a dead wood no way to revive it? Thanks
Could it also be done as a raft? Also if you live in a less temperate ,climate like me.. winter is terribly cold. -20°F is rather normal. Working on a tree in winter is ill advised
Help I have a 2 Hinoki Cypress trees that I have decided to bonsia myself, wired them both. One tree is very lush and green looking like it is thriving. The other tree has started to wither. The one that is thriving I put in a very large pot. The one that isn't, was put in to a small bonsia pot. I have since last week out it in to a large pot just to give it some aid. I water both trees everyday. When it was in the small pot you could see the exposed top roots as the water would wash away the top soil. For the last two days I have decided to submerge the pot in a large bucket of water. I haven't over filled it, around 3cm below the rim of the pot. Please give any advice. Should I put moss on top of the soil bed?
Anyone know where I can find information for a laceleaf maple or acer palmatum dissectum. I have a specimin that's growing pretty well but winter will be a test for it as it gets to around -25c where I am. Looking for any good tips for overwintering and working with it when spring comes around once more.
You mentioned August-September is not the best time to prune deciduous trees, but is it true winter is a good time to prune them, after they've dropped their lives? Would love a video on winter care of maples, for instance!
Would you tell me why you dont want clean cuts? I understand it is to mimic what happens in nature with dead branches, but would a clean cut be more harmful? Appreciate your time~
From the website Bonsai Empire: In nature, deadwood is created when a tree is hit by lightning, exposed to sustained periods of drought or when branches snap due to ice stress, wind or weight of snow. The wood dies off and is bleached by intense sunlight. This technique is almost exclusively used on evergreen trees, as creating Jin or Shari on deciduous trees often looks unrealistic (deadwood on a deciduous tree often rots away over time).
Thank you Peter for giving me hope, my fam was burning weeds and set their Cyrptomeria on fire now only some green on 4 branches and the crest still live, I am still studying to see what might be salvage from this tree, it's 10 feet tall but hate to just cut it down. I will clean out the dead and see if I can get any back budding, thanks for giving me hope for this poor basket case.
Another Idea on how to revive a nearly dead Tree - probably works only with Trees that lose their Foliage in Autumn and store their Energy in the Roots - in Winter before the Tree has started with Budding, set the Trunk on Flames and let everything slightly underneath the first branch upwards burn, so hat in the end there nothing else left of the Tree than the Trunk and the Roots and in Theory if the Tree has stored enough Energy in its Roots it should be able to regrow more quickly and juvenile than with other Methods during Spring - yet I can't say it would actually work with Bonsais, because I don't know if they have stored enough Energy in their Roots...
This man is the Bob Ross of bonsai trees. So relaxing and impressive watching him work!
I wish he was the Gordon ramsey of bonsai.. Would be funny as fuck 🤣🤣
I totally agree, hahahaha. Couldn’t describe him better!,
I was thinking the same.
Lmao that's how I described him to my wife
@@Matty.Hill_87 he's much more refined than that, but he's talking the truth nonetheless - you just need to listen closely ;)
The only channel I know where a classy old man is talking about bonsai while wearing a Hawai shirt.
You can tell that he cares for the tree as he "pets it" while talking about it :) Love these videos. You can tell that he loves what he does and loves sharing his passion
I was thinking you were going to use the WD-40 to revive the tree.
Ha Ha! If only.
😳😳😳
Kadum ME TOO !!!!!😨
And some gaffer tape! XD
Right away i look down to the comments seconds i saw the WD-40 . Hahahhaa
It’s a year and a bit later.....can we see an update on this beautiful specimen?
It's dead.
@@marcusaurelius3378 Thank you for the update.
@@apolycarp I think I've seen it in a video recently.
Hey thanks for this! I didn't find the video you're talking about, could you put the link here please?
@@AstralApophis link?
And for some reason youtube wants me to get into bonsai. Ok. subbed
You will not regret this decision, my dear gnome
Done!
Same haha! I actually like the look of the sick tree.... Looking forward to more uploads
The best time to get into bonsai was 12 years ago. Second best time to get into bonsai is now.
@@AndreBorisov how come 12 years ago? It looks very interesting but also requires alot of patience and attention
"Tune in in 15 years to see the results."
The results at the end of the video are quite spectacular, considering the shape this tree came in :D
I hope I’m still around to see the after results.
Always tell my friends this 🤣🤣
I'm back from the future. The plant goes on. Believe me.
@@Edrwad Best comment yet. Lol.
Crazy that this video was suggested to me, I randomly ended up going to this nursery on a camping trip and the grounds are absolutely beautiful. Everyone was also really friendly.
Where did you camp??
@@Karen21041992 in a tent.. Duh 😉🤣
Totally amazing, at first i didn't see what a beautiful gnarled tree this would turn into. This tree is better now than it would have ever looked. I love when things go wrong in bonsai only to work out for the best. To me this tree aged 20 more years in one day, super job Peter you are a true master.
I would love to see a photograph of the tree as it is now.
You do such great work saving those trees, I sure hope that they get the care they need from that point on!
Yes!
I wonder how this tree is doing now after three years.
Such a shame to see such a beautiful tree fall in to such condition. Glad there are people like you around to restore some of the beauty.
I hope we get to see an update on this one sometime next fall.
He is dead already. You don't chunk those tree like that.
@@jivprod9871 i am pretty sure this guy knows better what you can do with themthan you do
mmm like he said, for the branches to set into a lower hanging posture will take years because of how old they are. Would be interesting to see if there's any new growth, but as usual with a bonsai you're cutting off most of that new growth... I think his hope for the tree was to see if in a few years there will be sprouting out of the base parts of the older branches. Next fall might not have anything to offer (besides more hope, would be nice to see it still alive).
@@jivprod9871 You're an expert too. wow
@@jivprod9871 Said the arboriculture expert.
That's a pretty amazing transformation. I still haven't developed the "eye" but when i keep at it my trees turn out pretty good. Thanks for all you do.
This is march 2023 and I learned from Mr. Bonsai how to take care of my juniper spartan who is in bad shape after
a killing summer in Texas, thank you for giving me hope for my little one spartan.
Mr. Chan, I know you said two years but when you have a chance please show us the tree's progress. Thank you!
Lots of people would have probably given up on that tree but Peter always has the vision to turn it into something beautiful. Thanks for the inspiration. Wonderful video. Thanks for sharing.
I love being able to see you treat and work with these sick trees! Thank you!
Some people may not like to see sick trees, but as a young but mildly experienced gardener, I understand that bonsai trees do not always look healthy and as beautiful as we would like.
It's kinda fun that I find this video two years after it's posted. I hope there's an update video eventually. showing the progress of this particular tree.
That is an amazing rescue job you did here. It would be great to see this tree today 4 years later :-).
What a work of art. It looked very nice in the beginning & you had hope through out the process. The end result was nice
Love your videos. Do you ever do a seasonal update? Showing the bonsai you cut today, this is how it looks 6 months, a year, even 2years later?
I saw another recovery video from this person. It seems to me that in the hands of an expert these sick little trees come out of it all better trees because somehow they have more experience. Their mishaps give them a unique character. They look less pampered and more world wide.
I somehow have killed every arborvitae cypress I have ever come in contact with. I do not know why but pines and other evergreens people claim i have a green thumb for. I for the life of me can not understand why this occurs. But, I was very glad to say you do not lose hope for trees. That made my heart happy! I am so glad to get inspiration from your video's. I am thinking of tackling a a scotch pine just because of what I seen you do on your video's in their care. They grow naturally here and I don't kill them. LOL
Keep trying - dont give up. You will get it right one day.
Thank you - Its a privilege to watch the Master at work....
That's incredible! Half way thru that I was getting worried because it was still looking really sad. But by the end it was pretty in it's own right 💜
I love the time scale involved with these trees. Making some changes and then spending the next 3 or 4 years considering what changes might be made next time.
As soon as I saw this Gentleman, I knew I was in the right place for Bonsai
Well done! You see trees much like that here in the Sierra Nevada. Would love to see an update video on this tree.
What a great job Peter. It's like a whole new chapter in its life; lots of character with a story to tell.
Well done!
From Spag Moss Land
I like the Spag Moss Land!
Where’s spag moss land, Canada? Lol
@@hanzifaction New Zealand, bro 😊
That's a nice tree. I liked the look especially before it was wired.
Thank you for your videos. You are a natural teacher. I love that shirt.
I'm glad you started using the microphone, hope that next time it will stay on.
Btw nice recovery.
Greetings from Hungary.
Peter, you really are the Tree Doctor, or more like a tree magician!
Its wonderful to watch you work; you can see you go into 'the zone'. This tree really is a Phoenix from the flames.
Production team: love the still photos , especially the before and after shots. Its lovely to see Peter pruning, even when its sped up. I could watch your intro all day 💙
Bonsai Hero
I love watching you breathe new life into trees that others have given up on!
What an absolutely beautiful result, in time this tree could turn into a masterpiece.
“Nothing is bad without being good for something” -- so much philosophical lessons that makes bonsai so spiritual deep for me. 🙏 Shinto!
Peter, I can't believe how much better this tree looks now! It is really more interesting now than it probably ever was!
I'd give my right... no, my left arm for this tree!
I would love to see the next spurt of growth. Keep us posted, you are doing such a great job!
Poor little Charlie Brown tree needed love. Tough love at the hands of the master✂️. 🎄🤗
it's like one of my favorite trees you've shown so far
it just makes for a fantastic character when it suffered a bit
in a few years it will look great again :)
Thank you God for giving me these videos to keep my head on straight as we go through this shut down of life. My life is not shut down, it has just started.
It would be great to see what this tree, and others you've restyled significantly, look like now a year or more has passed!
It's 1:30 AM, I have an exam in a few days but here I am..... W/e subscribed, I like it.
Just like in life you work with what you have and make it beautiful. You did just that.
A wonderful video! I have admired the art of bonsai for years, although sadly I have to accept that owning a bonsai isn't in the cards for me. I'm struggling to keep my pothos alive 😂. I will live vicariously through UA-cam creators like this gentleman!
I adore this, best youtubr suggestion ever
Stunning, before & after! As I reflect about it ‘neglect’ can have some value. This requires some risk, of course. The base of trunk is absolutely exceptional.
Somuch love and dedication in restoration. Thank you for helping us understand. This is my first time here and i hit subscribe after 1 minute watching. Please learn us more
where can i get that amazing shirt.
We are not worthy!!! You are truly a Master! Thank you for sharing your craft. I look forward to the day when I can take a class with you. Bravo 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽
Please index this video for reference in the late spring early summer next year to allow us to see the progress. Thx and keep up the good work. If I can ever afford it, I would love to visit your nursery and take a couple of classes.
Email me and I will see what I can do for you.
Ive truly fallen in love with bonsai trees, they are so amazing, uuuh!!! I want them all!!
Peter I know you have a video out there on your sphagnum moss trick. It seems you were using it on this tree. I have a hinoki cypress that dried out a bit this winter. Most is brown but there are some localized green spots. It is in pumice and akadama. Would you recommend repotting into sphagnum moss? How much of the old soil would I remove?
What a shame that they didn’t water it! It was such a beautiful tree!
Amazing transformation. Learning a ton of small things each video.
I fixed all the duplicate post. Sorry youtube bugs are weird
@@christianvanstaden9103 Some people get annoyed but they really should, not - bugs in the system?
Amazing recovery, Peter! This video has given me hope whenever I discover a "rescue" tree at the big box stores! :)
Anyone shocked by the reduction of growth - take heart. A Cryptomeria, growing in my garden has been cut back many times but still grows and grows - and wild birds love it. I'm sure this one will be fine.
Never realized till now how jacked this guys forearms are
as a beginner (3 seasons) i am inspired by you ... i saw a lot of your videos
i cant wait to see an update for this tree!! but two years is so long aaa
Thank you Peter for this video. I have a cascade cryptomeria with the same issue. The only live part is the big pad at the bottom. It has not budded back for 3 years. I’m thinking of doing some fancy wiring with the lengthy bare trunk. This is an inspiration.
i just found your channel and i am in love with watching your videos! Peter, your shirts are just fantastic!!
I'm sure that guy got himself a whole new staff
They are fertilizing the tree now
I need some help, and if can tell me what to do, I appreciate it. I have pruned a banyan tree and have put the pieces in both soil and water. They have been there for a week, and both of them are dry and almost dead. Is there a way to mend these like you mended that grown tree?
Do you ever revisit old projects like this? Would be really interesting to see it now.
I have 2 bonsai trees. A fig and an English oak. Mould keeps building up on the soil. What’s causing it and how can I prevent it?? Is it doing any harm??
You should rename it the Lazarus Pine, nice work, as usual. Thanks
Wow that tree looked dead, the repairs made it look awesome. This is art, if the owners keep that thing well cared for it will be a masterpiece.
Pretty cool how it takes years and years, some of these dang trees in museums are 1,000, that’s insane!
I love how it turned out.
I’m planning on starting with a young tree, and in the spring I will get cuttings from some other trees. I’m exited because If I do it right they will last my whole life
I always feel bad skipping ahead in his videos, but sometimes do, just had to see what it would look like
is it possible to purposefully grow fungus on the larger dead lower branches?
or would the fungus damage parts of the living tree then?
Might be a little late, but fungi are specialized to degrade and "eat" wood, even if it takes a while, so after a few years the live tissue can get damaged from the fungus. The amount of damage depends on how healthy your tree is, but it is unnecessery stress for the tree. I think it's better to preserve the dead branches with sulfur solution, so they don't get eaten
Peter you’re amazing. I’ve been growing bonsais for twenty years and still lose the odd one every 3-5 years. Your tutoring still amazes me and I can sit enthralled during your videos. Thank you from Australia.🇦🇺🙏🌲
Super nice transformation ! Thank you !
My Crypptomeria needed a rescue and I put it in spaghum moss as you advised, Mr Chan. I really hope it wil go back to its former beauty. The foliage is not entirely brown really, but got darker and looks dry/scorched and the roots don't have any new growth at all. I didn't let it dry out, at all. Can the reason be that my tree didn't like the reporting I've done at beginning of March from an ordinary flower pot to a ceramic bonsai tree? Maybe it was too early, or I cut too much roots? Thank you
Quiet presentable future bonsai indeed Peter,.inspiring.. Can't wait for the next one.
Very informative and fun video. Thanks master , your customers are lucky to have you around - it's priceless that you exist to the world, very wise man
Crazy how you fixed it, I would've for sure said, "Nope, it's dead, no saving it."
Is it ok if the branch cracks a bit due to over bending? Do you treat the crack?
So long as it is not completely broken, you can seal it with sealant and it will heal.
At 14.20 and at 14.37 you clearly hear the brand snap quite loudly as he bends it, but he doesn't flinch the least and he is clearly in control. In the latter example, it even seems like he does a little pre-cutting on beforehand. So it's quite interesting and I wondered the same: how does that work? :D
I'm sure that tree will have a happy life now. I have a bistlecone pine and wondered if you could recommend a liquid feed?
The moment he started to lower the branches with the wires I immediately saw his vision! I’m sure it will work! Lots of hope for this tree.
Sad that it was almost lost but it looks like it has a bright future with a lot of character.
Agreed, lots of opportunity for deadwood.
Yes! It tells a beautiful story and symbolizes that when things look bad (dead), there is often still life. And although it may scar, you can still come out beautiful!
I would have been devastated if that was one of my trees, 15-20 years of work gone just like that due to a simple mistake.
Really great rescue , Mister Chan .
Hi thanks for the info, just wondering if my soil is adequate for my Chinese elm. I repotted it last year using bonsai focus repotting soil and it was doing really well until last month and all the leaves fell off and looks dead , I think this was down to not watering enough, I watched a video which advised me to put in the sink and fill up to the edge of the pot and allow water to soak in from underneath. Repeat every few days keeping the soil moist . I'm only 1 day in and so I'm waiting another day or so to soak again, I was just wondering if it was advisable at this stage to repot using a better soil mix or should I keep what I have until the summer or when/ if it starts growing again?
Thanks
Keep showing the therapies for sick trees. You are an excellent bonsai doctor
Hello there i saw bonsai of my dad. I want to revive it. But unfortunately when I cut it the some part of branches the bark is brown already is it revivable just a dead wood no way to revive it? Thanks
Very nice hehe is it possible to graft branches on empty places?
And Peter does it again! Taking a tree that anyone else would give up on and rescuing it! A master truly!
Could it also be done as a raft?
Also if you live in a less temperate ,climate like me.. winter is terribly cold. -20°F is rather normal. Working on a tree in winter is ill advised
Raft would be difficult as the branches are not very flexible
Help I have a 2 Hinoki Cypress trees that I have decided to bonsia myself, wired them both. One tree is very lush and green looking like it is thriving. The other tree has started to wither. The one that is thriving I put in a very large pot. The one that isn't, was put in to a small bonsia pot. I have since last week out it in to a large pot just to give it some aid. I water both trees everyday. When it was in the small pot you could see the exposed top roots as the water would wash away the top soil. For the last two days I have decided to submerge the pot in a large bucket of water. I haven't over filled it, around 3cm below the rim of the pot. Please give any advice. Should I put moss on top of the soil bed?
Anyone know where I can find information for a laceleaf maple or acer palmatum dissectum. I have a specimin that's growing pretty well but winter will be a test for it as it gets to around -25c where I am. Looking for any good tips for overwintering and working with it when spring comes around once more.
The Dissectums are no different from the other Japanese maples
Why did you leave parts of the dead branches still adjoined to the tree? Especially at the bottom.
To create Jin in the future.
New growth can come out as long as that branch is still alive
You mentioned August-September is not the best time to prune deciduous trees, but is it true winter is a good time to prune them, after they've dropped their lives? Would love a video on winter care of maples, for instance!
You can prune most months except in the coldest months. Here in the UK Surrey we dont prune in Dec and Jan but all other months OK
would grafting live branches onto the lower part of the trunk work?
Would you tell me why you dont want clean cuts? I understand it is to mimic what happens in nature with dead branches, but would a clean cut be more harmful? Appreciate your time~
From the website Bonsai Empire:
In nature, deadwood is created when a tree is hit by lightning, exposed to sustained periods of drought or when branches snap due to ice stress, wind or weight of snow. The wood dies off and is bleached by intense sunlight.
This technique is almost exclusively used on evergreen trees, as creating Jin or Shari on deciduous trees often looks unrealistic (deadwood on a deciduous tree often rots away over time).
Thank you Peter for giving me hope, my fam was burning weeds and set their Cyrptomeria on fire now only some green on 4 branches and the crest still live, I am still studying to see what might be salvage from this tree, it's 10 feet tall but hate to just cut it down. I will clean out the dead and see if I can get any back budding, thanks for giving me hope for this poor basket case.
I wonder how this tree is doing nowadays. Is there an update?
Another Idea on how to revive a nearly dead Tree - probably works only with Trees that lose their Foliage in Autumn and store their Energy in the Roots - in Winter before the Tree has started with Budding, set the Trunk on Flames and let everything slightly underneath the first branch upwards burn, so hat in the end there nothing else left of the Tree than the Trunk and the Roots and in Theory if the Tree has stored enough Energy in its Roots it should be able to regrow more quickly and juvenile than with other Methods during Spring - yet I can't say it would actually work with Bonsais, because I don't know if they have stored enough Energy in their Roots...
Absolutely wonderful and informative videos. Thank you So much.